City’s Best Barkeeps Compete With Maker’s Mark At Boneta

June 10, 2009.

I had the honour of judging the Maker’s Mark bourbon cocktail competition yesterday at Boneta with Joanne Sasvari of the Vancouver Sun, Angie Belise of Beam Global Canada, and Kentucky’s own Bill Samuels Jr. (the esteemed president of Maker’s Mark).

While I’m not particularly fond of drinking at 1:oopm, especially spirits that clock in at 45% alcohol, I hadn’t had any Maker’s Mark for two months (not since my trip to Kentucky) and I was keen to get my tongue around some again. Also, when someone asks if you want to try 14 different cocktails from 14 of the city’s better bartenders, you’re a bit of an asshat if you say no.

The competitors were…

Danielle Tatarin of DB Bistro

Keenan Hood of George

Lauren Mote of The Refinery

Simon Kaulback of Boneta

Trevor Kallies of The Granville Room

Kyle Lane of DB Bistro

Kate McDonald of the TCC

Bobbi K of Boneta

JT of Market in the Shangri-La

Jon Smolensky of Brix

Charlie Ainsbury of The Diamond

Heather Perkins of the Irish Heather

Jason Kelly of Cobre

Shaun Layton of George

And here they are at work…

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The barkeeps worked in pairs and were allotted eight minutes each to prep and pour their cocktails. There were a lot of twists on the Manhattan and the Old Fashioned, plus some ingenious inventions.

One fellow, Kyle Lane from DB Bistro, made a drink with double-smoked bacon fat infused bourbon (nuanced by Amaro Montenegro and sweet vermouth) under a thick foam of English pea. Another, Jon Smolensky of Brix, constructed a mealish cocktail in a Collins glass with cardamom, tuaca, vanilla, Fee’s Old Fashioned bitters, and over an ounce of organic carrot juice (garnished with a whole carrot, leaves and all). “I’m more of a wine guy,” he apologised. No need. I thought it was a marvelous departure.

Heather Perkins of The Irish Heather is temporarily hypnotised while presenting her "Tallulah's Mark" to MM president Bill Samuel's Jr.

My favourite drink of the day came from Heather Perkins of The Irish Heather (ex-Rangoli and before that, a life in San Francisco). Her super simple “Tallulah’s Mark” saw Maker’s paired up with Gentaine aperitif and whiskey barrel aged bitters. The kicker was the ice, which she’d made herself with wonderfully floral spices. Just smelling the empty glass was intoxicating…

Trevor Kallies of The Granville Room pours his "Showdown at Star Hill" (named after Maker's Mark location in Kentucky)

Other libations I’d cradle again would include the “Loretto Process” from George’s head booze arbiter, Shaun Layton, a brilliantly conceived and well balanced interpretation of the bourbon-making process that included toasted oak vapour and a syrup made from lager, and “Showdown at Star Hill”, a Gunpowder tea-enhanced glass of sweet genius from Trevor Kallies of The Granville Room.

JT of Market in the Shangri La hotel aims for his Marksman's Target.

The final results were very close. We were tasked with awarding a maximum of 20 points each for Balance, Creativity, Presentation, and the Showcasing of Maker’s Mark, making for a possible total of 80 points. In third place with 72.5 points was JT of Market with his watermelon and rhubarb driven “Marksman’s Target”. With 74 points in second place, pouring his Loretto Process, was Shaun Layton of George.

Lauren Mote of The Refinery makes her Charred Bourbon Sour

The winner was Lauren Mote of The Refinery with her 74.5 point Charred Bourbon Sour, a drink that came complete with its on molecular deconstruction on the side (bourbon meringue, bitters and bourbon gelee, charred oak brittle, etc). While not particularly a fan of side dishes with my drinks, there was no denying the achievement in the glass here. Her cocktail, a summery thing that I’d have again and again, was deliciously without fault. Here it is, should you want to make it at home…

Ingredients

1 egg white

1/2 oz house bitters

1 oz charred american oak and caramelized coconut syrup

2 oz maker’s mark

3/4 oz lemon juice

Directions

Shake all ingredients together until frothy – double strain into a single old fashioned glass – osoyoos cherry garnish.

Lauren Mote's Charred Bourbon Sour with its molecular twin on the side

Dayum. If the others were even half as good as Lauren’s (which I had the pleasure of tasting last night at The Refinery), that must have been a deliciously difficult decision. (Apparently I alliterate a lot when I’m hung over.)

Luck

F*ck yeah Lauren ! For the record she has way better bitters @ Refinery !

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Lorem Ipsum is simply dummy text of the printing and typesetting industry. Lorem Ipsum has been the industry's standard dummy text ever since the 1500s, when an unknown printer took a galley of type and scrambled it to make a type specimen book. It has survived not only five centuries, but also the leap into electronic typesetting, remaining essentially unchanged. It was .